Social conflict and sacrificial rhetoric: Luther’s discursive intervention and the religious division of labor

‘Sacrifice’ is a religious term whose use extends far beyond the church door. People from all walks of life speak of ‘sacrifice’ when they want to evoke an irreducible conflict in the relations between self, family, and society. In America, hardly a speech goes by without political leaders insisting...

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Main Author: Christopher Roberts
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Donner Institute 2006-01-01
Series:Scripta Instituti Donneriani Aboensis
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal.fi/scripta/article/view/67314
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spelling doaj-cfff42d4c8854761996ad1a609fa3b442020-11-25T01:46:36ZengDonner InstituteScripta Instituti Donneriani Aboensis0582-32262343-49372006-01-011910.30674/scripta.67314Social conflict and sacrificial rhetoric: Luther’s discursive intervention and the religious division of laborChristopher Roberts0Reed College‘Sacrifice’ is a religious term whose use extends far beyond the church door. People from all walks of life speak of ‘sacrifice’ when they want to evoke an irreducible conflict in the relations between self, family, and society. In America, hardly a speech goes by without political leaders insisting upon the necessity and virtue of sacrifice, but rarely will they clarify who is sacrificing what, and to whom. Indeed, this is not only an American phenomenon, as a number of recent texts examining ‘sacrifice’ as a term in various national discourses have shown. Such a political and economic deployment of a religious figure demands interpretation, for not only does the rhetoric of sacrifice span the globe, it constitutes a problem with a long genealogy. As a key moment in the Western segment of this genealogy, this article examines the way that Luther’s exegetical work rhetoricalized sacrifice, and, in doing so, constructed a new discursive position, the pastor as anti-sophist, or parrhesiast, in the religious division of labor.https://journal.fi/scripta/article/view/67314Social conflictLuther, Martin, 1531-1565Sacrifice -- ChristianityTheology, LutheranBible -- Criticism, interpretationPolemics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Christopher Roberts
spellingShingle Christopher Roberts
Social conflict and sacrificial rhetoric: Luther’s discursive intervention and the religious division of labor
Scripta Instituti Donneriani Aboensis
Social conflict
Luther, Martin, 1531-1565
Sacrifice -- Christianity
Theology, Lutheran
Bible -- Criticism, interpretation
Polemics
author_facet Christopher Roberts
author_sort Christopher Roberts
title Social conflict and sacrificial rhetoric: Luther’s discursive intervention and the religious division of labor
title_short Social conflict and sacrificial rhetoric: Luther’s discursive intervention and the religious division of labor
title_full Social conflict and sacrificial rhetoric: Luther’s discursive intervention and the religious division of labor
title_fullStr Social conflict and sacrificial rhetoric: Luther’s discursive intervention and the religious division of labor
title_full_unstemmed Social conflict and sacrificial rhetoric: Luther’s discursive intervention and the religious division of labor
title_sort social conflict and sacrificial rhetoric: luther’s discursive intervention and the religious division of labor
publisher Donner Institute
series Scripta Instituti Donneriani Aboensis
issn 0582-3226
2343-4937
publishDate 2006-01-01
description ‘Sacrifice’ is a religious term whose use extends far beyond the church door. People from all walks of life speak of ‘sacrifice’ when they want to evoke an irreducible conflict in the relations between self, family, and society. In America, hardly a speech goes by without political leaders insisting upon the necessity and virtue of sacrifice, but rarely will they clarify who is sacrificing what, and to whom. Indeed, this is not only an American phenomenon, as a number of recent texts examining ‘sacrifice’ as a term in various national discourses have shown. Such a political and economic deployment of a religious figure demands interpretation, for not only does the rhetoric of sacrifice span the globe, it constitutes a problem with a long genealogy. As a key moment in the Western segment of this genealogy, this article examines the way that Luther’s exegetical work rhetoricalized sacrifice, and, in doing so, constructed a new discursive position, the pastor as anti-sophist, or parrhesiast, in the religious division of labor.
topic Social conflict
Luther, Martin, 1531-1565
Sacrifice -- Christianity
Theology, Lutheran
Bible -- Criticism, interpretation
Polemics
url https://journal.fi/scripta/article/view/67314
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